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Lamination Or PMD?

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 Posted 04/28/2015  4:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ChildOfTheWheat to your friends list
it does look like the nose is more pushed down... Hmm...
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 Posted 04/28/2015  7:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Buddy to your friends list
There's a bit of displaced metal on the ear that makes me think it took a hit...

from a meteor.
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 Posted 04/28/2015  8:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ErrorCoins222 to your friends list
I guess I would expect more reverse damage if it took a hit that large. It very well could have been struck through - in this case the fields would have shielded the struck through area from handling/circulation and would have protected its original red color. I'm not 100% though.
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 Posted 04/28/2015  9:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jasper62 to your friends list
I want to say PSD because of the damage around the rim especially above trust,over by the L in liberty and again at the bottom of the bust on the rim but it's hard to imagine this kind of damage on one side but not on the reverse.Tell ya what ,I'm going to sit on the fence
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 Posted 04/28/2015  11:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add koinpro to your friends list
You can get this type of effect with a power washer with the spray concentrated as much as possible in one spot (in this case the coin) but I don't know how deep it will go. I tried it once to remove green slime. It caused the coin to laminate sort of in a crater with peripheral flaking and ruined the coin. Surprisingly, it did not change the color of the coin. With that said, the lamination may have already been in the subsurface of the coin. Maybe somebody with nothing better to do can try it and see what happens. I did it on a 1964 cent CONECA-DDR-001 that was pretty much ruined anyway that I paid $5 for.
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 Posted 04/29/2015  12:09 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CoinMasters to your friends list
So the only thing that survived was the green slime lol
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 Posted 04/29/2015  7:28 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CoinHuntingDrew to your friends list

Quote:
...can get this type of effect with a power washer with the spray concentrated as much as possible in one spot ...



I'm kind of curious how you would know that a power washer to this coin would do that kind of damage.


I would have to assume you've power washed several coins in your lifetime...
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 Posted 04/29/2015  8:22 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SsuperDdave to your friends list
You crack me up, Drew.


Quote:
You can get this type of effect with a power washer with the spray concentrated as much as possible in one spot (in this case the coin) but I don't know how deep it will go.


Aside that completely new to me (but intuitively obvious) method of sending a coin back to the Stone Age, I was ready to think this an old lamination which has recently separated, hence the fresh copper visible. It's otherwise tough to imagine mechanical damage that didn't visibly push at least a little metal somewhere.
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 Posted 04/29/2015  10:23 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add koinpro to your friends list
CoinHuntingDrew,
Ya, I tried removing the green slime with the power washer from a 1964 DDR-001 cent that I purchases as a cull. Do they still use the term cull or an I an antique. It did remove the slime and created a Lamination too. I have not tried that method of slime removal since.
Edited by koinpro
04/29/2015 10:24 pm
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 Posted 04/30/2015  6:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CoinMasters to your friends list
There are many terms currently in use that I am unfamiliar with, therefore I am unqualified to classify you as an antique. I would like to know what a cull is. It would probably tell me why you purchased a coin to powerwash.
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 Posted 04/30/2015  6:53 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SsuperDdave to your friends list

Quote:
I would like to know what a cull is.


I'll try to stop laughing at everyone else to give to a straight answer.

"Culls" are coins which really don't have much to recommend them to collectors, usually because of extreme wear or damage. Hence, the ones you test your powerwashing skills on.
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 Posted 04/30/2015  7:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CoinMasters to your friends list
Thanks Dave. Sometimes this place does keep us in stitches. The business of numismatics is fairly intense most of the time, a little humor every so often is welcome to me. Captain Kirk said it best, "The more complex the mind, the more the need for play". lol
Edited by CoinMasters
04/30/2015 7:36 pm
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 Posted 04/30/2015  7:48 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coop to your friends list
Sometimes they can have a scratch, or damage that ruins real value for them. Usually reduces the value, a lot!
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 Posted 04/30/2015  8:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CoinMasters to your friends list
Yes I'm sure it does Coop. In my case though, it makes no difference. While not new to coin collecting, I am new to error coins so I have to start somewhere; I will upgrade as I go. I hope to one day have an album with "knock your socks off errors", and rolls of die chips, rolls of misaligned dies, rolls of clashes, etc.
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 Posted 04/30/2015  10:43 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CoinHuntingDrew to your friends list

Quote:
It did remove the slime and created a Lamination too.



LOL!

I can't stop laughing at this. Power washing a coin would be my LAST resort if all else fails.
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